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CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases
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CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

Dec 26, 2015

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Page 1: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions

Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD

Division of Infectious Diseases

Page 2: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

Could a viral CNS infection present this way?

• Herpes viruses – CMV, VZV, HSV can affect the CNS

• Typical picture is encephalitis often with ventriculitis

• CSF usually abnormal

• CNS mass lesions not seen

• Couldn’t explain pulmonary findings

Page 3: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

Initial approach to an AIDS patient with brain lesions

No mass effect, no enhancement with IV contrast

• HIV encephalopathy• Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML)

Mass effect, enhancement with IV contrast

• Abscess• Malignancy

Page 4: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

Differential diagnosis of contrast-enhancing CNS lesions in an AIDS patient

Abscess• Toxoplasmosis• Cryptococcosis, dimorphic

fungi (histoplasmosis, coccidioidomycosis)

• Pyogenic abscess (Staph, Strep, polymicrobial)

• Tuberculosis• Nocardiosis• Filamentous fungi• Neurocysticercosis

Malignancy• Primary CNS lymphoma• Non-CNS cancer

metastatic to brain

Page 5: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

Toxoplasma gondii • Cats are definitive host, many other animals

incidental host• Seroprevalence in Baltimore ~10%• Disease in AIDS is reactivation of latent infection

Pro Con• Most common cause of brain lesions

in AIDS patients

• Multiple ring-enhancing lesions typical (basal ganglia, corticomedullary junction cerebrum and cerebellum)

• Toxo IgG negative

• Lung lesions atypical

Page 6: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

CNS toxoplasmosis

Page 7: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

Yeast: H. capsulatum (C. neoformans) • Found worldwide, but geographical variation in intensity

of exposure• Lung – fungemia – CNS involvement in 10-20% (usually

meningitis)• Histoplasma antigen testing from serum or urine highly

accurate in disseminated disease

Pro Con• May produce nodular lung infiltrates • CRAG negative

• Brain abscesses rare with Histo

Page 8: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.
Page 9: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.
Page 10: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

Pyogenic brain abscess • Classification

– Extension from sinuses or ear, – “Metastatic” – typically multiple– trauma or post-operative

• S. aureus, Streptococci, anaerobic organisms

Pro Con• Could pulmonary lesions be septic

emboli?• High-grade bacteremia should have

been readily detected

• No association with AIDS

Page 11: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

Mycobacterium tuberculosis • Infects 1/3 of global population• Transition from latent to active disease occurs in 10% of HIV

co-infected patients per year• CNS involvement

– Meningitis – prominent basilar meningeal enhancement– Tuberculomas – often multiple, solid-appearing grossly, often

accompanied by meningitis– Tuberculous abscess – quite rare, large, solitary, multiloculated

Pro Con• Appealing explanation for lung-brain

involvement

• ETOH and drug dependence increases likelihood of exposure

• AFB smears (induced sputum) negative at outside hospital

• No meningitis

Page 12: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

Tuberculomas

Page 13: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

Nocardiosis • “Higher-order” bacteria, gram-positive branching

filaments, usually acid-fast• Ubiquitous environmental saprophytes• Defects in cell-mediated immunity important risk factor• Manifestations

– Cutaneous infections (nodular lymphangitis, mycetoma)– Pulmonary – disseminated (usually N. asteroides)

Pro Con• Lung-brain involvement common

• Pulmonary nodular infiltrates common

• No cavities or pleural effusion

Page 14: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

Acid fast stain of N. asteroides

Page 15: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

Nocardia pulmonary infection in transplant patient

Page 16: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

Nocardia brain abscess

Page 17: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

Rhodococcus equi• Gram-positive, weakly acid-fast rod• May be mistaken for a “diptheroid” contaminant• Causes pneumonia in foals• Present in soil, 1/3 infected have exposure to horses• In immunocompromised humans it presents as a TB mimic –

indolent, upper-lobe, cavitary• Difficult to treat

Pro Con• Dissemination to brain can occur • Rare

• No horse exposure

• Pulmonary infiltrates with R. equi typically upper lobe cavities

Page 18: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

Filamentous fungi: Aspergillus, Pseudallescheria, zygomycosis• Neutrophil defects strongest risk factor for invasive aspergillosis–bone

marrow transplant, chronic granulomatous disease (CGD)– Other risk factors – steroids, alcoholism

• Lung or sinuses typical portal of entry– Dissemination to brain common, never meningitis

• Unusual in AIDS patients – very advanced disease, relative neutropenia, steroid use

• Notable aspect of pathogenesis is angioinvasion

Pro Con• Lung involvement with dissemination

to brain a hallmark of filamentous fungi

• “Wedge” shaped pulmonary infiltrates characteristic

• ?PE

• Rare complication in AIDS

• WBC 11,380 at presentation making neutropenia unlikely

Page 19: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

Aspergillus invading blood vessel

Page 20: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

Neurocysticercosis• Taenia solium (pork tapeworm)

– Eat pigs (undercooked) – tapeworm infection – secrete eggs– Eat poop (containing eggs) – cysticercosis (tissue infection with

parasites)

• Infection common south of the Mexican border– Accounts for 50% of adult onset seizures

Pro Con• CNS lesions in NC – typically round,

fluid filled or calcified

• Not AIDS associated

• Wouldn’t explain pulmonary process

Page 21: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

Neurocysticercosis

Page 22: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

Malignancies

Page 23: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

Primary CNS lymphoma• 2nd Most common cause of ring-enhancing brain lesions

in AIDS patients in US• Unlike peripheral lymphomas – PCNSL seen exclusively

in advanced disease• Solitary lesion in 50%, multicentric in 50%• Non-Bx methods to distinguish from toxo: Toxo IgG, EBV

PCR from CSF, metabolic function scans (SPECT, PET)

Pro Con• Most common cause of enhancing

brain lesion in AIDS patients with negative toxo IgG

• Advanced immunosuppression typical

• Lung infiltrates would have to be a second process

Page 24: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

Malignancy metastatic to brain

• Most common tumors metastasizing to brain – lung, kidney, colon, breast, melanoma

• Kaposi’s sarcoma metastasis to brain extremely rare• Peripheral lymphomas may metastasize to brain

Pro Con• PE related to hypercoagulability of

malignancy• Most common cancers metastasizing

to brain not particularly associated with AIDS

• Pulmonary lesions don’t look like metastases

Page 25: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

Differential diagnosis of contrast-enhancing CNS lesions in an AIDS patient

Abscess• Toxoplasmosis• Cryptococcosis• Histoplasmosis • Pyogenic abscess (Staph,

Strep, polymicrobial)• Tuberculosis• Nocardiosis• Aspergillosis• Neurocysticercosis

Malignancy• Primary CNS lymphoma• Non-CNS cancer

metastatic to brain

Page 26: CPC:38 year-old AIDS patient with brain and pulmonary lesions Gregory M. Lucas, MD PhD Division of Infectious Diseases.

Clinical diagnosis

• Pulmonary aspergillosis disseminated to brain

• Nocardiosis

• Histoplasmosis

• Tuberculosis